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Title: Voting for Malcolm X Author: Joel Olson Date: 2004 Language: en Topics: Elections, United States of America, Malcolm X, Bring the Ruckus Source: Retrieved on 15th November 2021 from https://joelolson.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Voting-for-Malcolm-X.pdf
Does it matter whether Bush or Kerry are president? Will Bush make
things worse on ordinary people than Kerry would have? These are debates
that many radicals have had before and after the election. Anarchists
dogmatically insist that voting changes nothing and that voting for
Kerry is voting for the system. Most of the rest of the left, however,
turns social democratic every four years, stumping for the Democratic
Party as the “best hope” for working people and to provide “space” for
radicals to organize in. (As if the problem with radical organizing
today is the lack of “space.”)
Having lost, most of the anti-Bush left now predicts a coming fascism.
(The rest are packing their bags for Canada, muttering how “stupid”
Americans are. Leaving the U.S. is fine if you want to live in a social
democratic state, but if you want to struggle for a truly free society,
this is the place to be.)
Are they right? Will the next four years be significantly worse than a
Democratic administration would have been? Bush will certainly take the
country in different directions than a Kerry administration would go.
The war in Iraq will continue, the Supreme Court will likely overturn
Roe v. Wade in the next twenty years, and gay marriage will be set back
for years.
But seriously, people, would Kerry have ended the war on Iraq any
sooner? His Iraq strategy was basically indistinguishable from Bush’s,
except he thought he could persuade the French and the Germans to send
troops to get kidnapped and killed execution-style, too! He would have
pursued the war with as much gusto as Bush, and his retreat would have
been as hasty and destructive as Bush’s will be. You could argue that
Kerry wouldn’t have gotten us into further wars and that Bush might. I
doubt it. The military is already stretched way too thin. Bush can’t
attack Iran or North Korea even if he wanted to. And I dare them to
institute a draft.
The overturning of Roe v. Wade is likely whether a Republican wins this
election or the next one, given the current political climate and the
legal strategies of the pro-choice lobby, which is perpetually defensive
rather than on the attack. Abortion and reproductive freedom will be
ultimately settled in one place: the streets. Let’s bring this battle on
now rather than later. I love wearing heavy boots and stomping over
anti- choicers barricading clinic doors.
The gay marriage issue is ultimately going to be settled by amending
state constitutions rather than the U.S. Constitution. The gay marriage
lobby will wind selective lawsuits through the courts, most of them will
fail, and then they will have to decide whether to take to the streets
or wait a few more years for the political winds to shift. (Right now it
seems like they’re going to sit and wait a while.) Bush is relevant in
this only in that a more conservative Supreme Court will undoubtedly
uphold the anti-gay marriage amendments, but even if Kerry could have
appointed some liberals to the Court there’s no guarantee that they’d
act differently—or that Democrats would suddenly become pro-gay marriage
(which they’re not).
The economy is a non-issue. Both are free-trading peddlers in
exploitation and alienation.
So I did what any person who just can’t put political principles aside
to vote for the lesser of two evils would do. Like I’ve done for every
election since I started voting, I cast my ballot for the only person
I’d truly support for president, Malcolm X.
Hey, someday he might win.